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Page Four of the industry e at all n conscious of their common » expense of the Inter- openly declare in no program | terhpt of the workers ing problems of | their miserable condi branch times be to revoit age ion 3 By ROSE WorTIs. “Women’s Wear” of Friday, In the the {the worker “Russia Today” ’linterests and during critical periods e been hired by the} Shamelessly, the Regt : BL ee ane coal November the 4th, there appeared 4 |have come to on another's as y an machine to make murderous |‘Amalgamated are selling out me in- | decadent POreaetetes i cated a , Pp’ i a a ; pets Sxuablcens he en -' main their hold on the re | statement about the organization of |),5+, financially and mor rik- |attaeks on workers terests of the workers to the emp oy- main: om ‘ ; & ‘ \ new ociation of Women’s Ap- jing illustration was the attitude of] Hundreds of thousands of dollars!ers and are advc ; mg the dpabvadue! et Ne gronlor bereiers Seetuet American Student Delegation Film Shows:#AIl j i 7 ri T i , Is are s a f product ! te m of al - rade | fs , ; el Industries of America. The |ih6 Industrial Council during the Fur-;from union trust funds are squan-| standard of production, which will united io e | 5 : statement runs in part as follows: He cles strike of 1926, when they Injune are used by the jeliminate the most basic union con- workers. They are divided Aaa Phases of Life in Soviet Union “The objects to be accomplished | fused to permit their employees. to dom in its struggle against the |ditions in the shox i tioae ay as Jed ans yenoy peutauess Ae ee i je ‘t ning together for Pe ; aie aa ed {sign of resistance d even w e| policy is not dictated by the needs Aimer snes . include ‘the joining together for | work an extra half day during the . Workers are imp oned {sign of re stance, an Byer ich tae peues shes MEE the duveloe nents II NDOUBTEDUY the best motion cis- BUTLER VENPORT. the purpose mutual benefit for height of the season (which under or- x terms thru the provocations | tacit consent of the officials of the oe Rati nh ae thei elidue ture showing conditions in the So- i 1 he facture | ; B Bi oY ves ion | algamate he e vers are re-|of the industry, but by Ee) ; . 8 % those engaged in the manufacture | ginary circumstances they would who call then ue a Am pyamatey, ee re oa interests, viet Union to’ be shown in America or wh ribution of wom- | sladly agreed to) simply because The ¢ xpressed wishes of the porgea 1g ets al Ds a iAglee“on'| Make! Common Cause’ A patnat Mames (abtte the wrdsenbitine 1s Rusita Wo: en’s, 1 children’s wear | money was to be contributed to the|/workers are openly defied and the |out’ all suth workers who foe on ees (Onna Cone es ee 1 t line t an- } = . 5 > unior rough » sha y al i standards, regardles 0 here @is one da , ever, Lf eS St 3 i and kindred lines, and those en- / support of the fur stri However, |the union brought to shame by ajunion standards, regardl "| whieh is recognized by all of them, «| Student Delegation'to visit the Work: gaged in the manufacture or whole- | ++ _ i on clique of bureauer Sigman, a whether they are rights or lefts. | which is recognized by i D s Pe en ; hat |e.‘ deicinbe rc taco ean : ‘ ierounded(| = "Thee work f the Amalgamated |danger which to them is more real|ers and Peasant Republic, now play- sale distribution of materials that acle. to more cooperation, | wealthy property owner, surroundec Hey Workers or the malgamated | Hue acing than the attacks |ing at the Fifth Avenue Playhouse. go to produce and develop the in- | with the result 1 iffi- | by « s of the lowest t | axe paying dearly for the treachery of | and more menacing than tacks | 5 mentioned in the United | oyity hi been obviated by the for-}as the <esman of the worke their leaders during the cloakmakers’|of the employers; that is the rising} The photoplay portrays all sections | evant f thi new oe hiationse thas usurps the right to rule the ies | strike, for the support given by| revolt of the workers against their|of life in the Soviet Union. More | been repeatedly pointed |™S"0n.0" Dos new a P Sie can eSB Oe thestho! s of clos s-|Beckerman and_ his g to the |further domination in the unions. To | than half of the picture is devoted to | t 2 ; in : aaa ica pice bureaucracy of the I. L. G. W. U. and! obviate this danger, they have found | factory scenes, the rest to several im-| | cies pee ‘Whe: Burtiera inion | the Fu the Sigmans, Wolls and} common ground: in expulsions and/portant contemporary events in the | al, un | front in Similar is the situation in the Fur} MeGr in their efforts to convert | suppression of the workers discon- | Soviet Union. direct ‘activ-.| smntherance of their common goa | wor eat international Galne anonne | the militant needle trade unions into | tented with their bankrupt policies of] One of the most inspiring parts of | es es a ae: us lnertall aehiavamentera® the Furri “company unions” ruled by their |submission to the employers. To ac-|the picture is Defense Week ie aten further goes on to What of the Unions. 1U ini n dar ng the lett adminis- | clique. |complish this, they have mobilized all] took place after Voikoff, Soviet Union j How are the unions equipped to} tion, wh 4 organiza- | The Cap Makers. their resources and have been one ambassador to Poland was murdered , | jmeet the new developments in the in-j ti) to the forefront of the needle} This break-down of union conditions | "& ee Nias of Sprinter oe and Great Britain broke off diplo- | : dustry? How will the die rade | trade unior an example of mili-|in the more important branches of the needle trade unions for the pas ampre relations. ees ct factory othe unions face the united front of the tancy, cla ousness and vir-|needle industries is having its effect | ¥°2* = ‘eae i workers, guns over their shoulders, | women’ |bosses? How will the of 1 ave been completely destroyed. Jon all other branches and today we ale ing pote aoe march to the Red Square, Moscow, to | notably needle trade unions, who are opposed | s 1 efforts of the work-jfind a situation in the Cap Makers’ tes SoH Gk a ee ean ane let world Imperialism know that they | Director of ‘and chief player in Lez edjto amalgamation of the needle trades | ..¢ under the left wing administr nion where President Zaritaky and | ®™ aie a ies ae meet dhe united (eee Sorend: the Soviet Union| ers ico’ npr antes) pecond arses Ae ’ ‘ jand have persecuted all the exponents | tion, which have rooted out gangster-|his supporters are ready to give up|Needle trades : against any attack made upon it. , d its units, the As- tion, meet this new of- of amalgam front of the bosses are answered with the Davenport Theatre. ism and corruption and have raised|the 40-hour week, the establishment The funeral of Arthus McManus, * Raves . Baas Whats 2 | . : sions ecutions. The de- : | cn anos | fensive of the bosses? What is the| the furriers from the status of laves | of which came as the result of the vic pulsiohs te ee ae un. | one of the leaders “of the Communist | This is a picture every worker should | Dress Industries of |situation in the needle trade unions | 5¢ both the employers and the corrupt | tory of the furriers. Zaritsky is nO) Bien Ee eA Epa: Par r of sGrent Britain is another attempt to (ee StRGHMuU avs ae | today? a clique to the di nity of class-| only ready to give up the 40-1 HeAENe bei sucessfully. /aucomipliched | SRenne sight. On the same bill the Fifth Avenue the hetterment ap | The Cloak & Dressmakers’ Union. workers fighting. milttantly | week without.a sign of resistance; but) 7 = scation et all thet irene |: Thousanda\ of workers ace crowded (Playhouse titeeental {Polat Neseann t Pnousis eaten Moai /&Dresstaakers)) Union (2 ter share of the product ‘of | is even willing to give up the week- | ches of the industry, is met by conces-|into the Red Square, in front of |“Forbidden Paradise,” directed by we conditions and the | The Cloak & Dressmakers! ; the glaring victory of the | work system, prevailing in the indus- |¢?° sae ate ites e of |Lenin’s tomb while N. Bucharin,| Ernest Lubitsch; a story of the love achievement closer accord be- |is lying prostrate, without a vestige y : 4 ure substitute |Sions to the bosses at the expense o i : Th Bee inloaalers am ee 3 bray The j ; the elimination of sub-|try for many years, and substitute | ' es for rank and | ¢ditor of the Pravda, delivers an ora-| affairs of Catherine the Great. Thus tween wholesalers and retailers, and |of its former strength. The job! - ‘ - s Fae cases |the workers. The demand for rank and | & r Be a ae Leattenets syste which had for g and the speed-up system; | piece work in its stead. |file control of the unions, for demo- | tion over the body of the dead English |in one night the audience has an op- Bee sslers “and their sources “of foen ee peat the aeaaee et all Serie has {the average 25 per cent wage in- Same Right Wing Methods. | : Communist. ° years bee e rce of all evils, has 8 portunity of comparing old Czarist i ' 5 , Hie 4 by Don Marquis, opens at Werba’s : cracy in the administration of union x crease, etc.; all this has been shat-| Zar ey ky’s manoeuvres in the Union i roe ‘ fee. int i 5 Russia to the Workers’ and Peasants’ #6 nc 2 ssi for received such impetus by the internal ‘ y n affairs is met with police, injunctions |_ The scenes of the development of Ww a ae ee iaieee ; is Leraoele “that daily the more legit- | tered, destroyed, by the hand of an jun-| today are typical of the methods em-| a4 imprisonment of workers. industry are also remarkable. New | Republic.—sS. A. P. sent a united front in the further. limate’ firms are disbanding their |ScTwpulous clique under the direction ployed by the trade union bureaucracy |T ef; Wing Leadership the Solution, | buildings and workers’ homes in many —- fot their enanen goal.” | plants and are becoming jobbers. of Woll and McGrady of the A. F. of | in answer to the offensive of the beat The developments of the past few/|parts of the Soviet Union are shown.| Leon M. Lion, the English producer s and the demands of the work- | Instead | ploy. for an aggressive policy. | Union conditions, for which the cloak {and dressmakers have bled for Association to Fight Workers. years have been an object lesson to] The workers’ rest homes are also|Wwho came here to stage “The Fana- Conditions at Low Level. ler zed, orga standards under. are : A | union protecting their interests in all fields. | P ‘ many | the workers in the needle trades, as| displayed upon the screen. Here we |tics” now playing at the 49th Street While this association is seemingly years, are competely wiped out. The| The furriers, who but a short time | ng the policy of fighting the | well as to the labor movement in gen-| see the former palaces of the Roman-| Theatre, will return to England fp menized to take care of the nurely | reek work aystem, which was estab-|2#° Held their heads erect conscious and organizing the out-of eral, ‘The brief experiences of the |offs and their supporters being used | shortly with a current American play business end of the employers’ in- lished a ad ‘gibak imdustry after 3 of their powerful union ready to back | town shops that have migrated from | ¢irriers and the cloak and dress- | by factory workers as a place to rest |for production at Wyndham’s The- ieee ty no. doula. that, he) its and bitter struggle, has been|them in their justified demands, are ‘the main centers, as proposed by the | makers with the left wing administra- | after toiling in the factories. atre, which he controls. proad aim eae a ane DE PeOCng abolished and piece work, at rates eae ee under een heslat the left wing, Zaritaky series Liana! tions have shown the workers a way| The student delegation is to be con- OO peated amie aeeerers Pleven lower than those prevailing in Nace ich dee eived by the old the employers concessions that would | out of their difficulties. It has shown | gratulated for issuing such a fine pic-| “Out of the Sea,” the new drama gaged in the various branches of the 1910, re-established. The 40-hour |Clique which is again becoming en- | reduce the standards of the New York | them that only the progressives have|ture. ‘The photoptaphy. is unusually Bee cccn iin the clare oe ines week, one of the greatest achieve- pence in the Fur Workers’ Inter- workers ie the level of the out-of-| 5 ,Program for strengthening the|clear, In fact, better than most pic-| Brooklyn Theatre, Monday evening, ?: ; eee es ae ments of the needle trade unions, is | Dap 3s et {unions and command forces capable} tures produced in the Soviet Union | November 28th, prior to the New eee Mie organization of this nO ta memory of the past. The ten| Sweat-shop conditions, contracting Unions Weakened—Bosses jof gaining improvements for the/that have been shown in America. York showing. Be ee eon shows, that the employers) 4 twelve hour day and the seven day |2"¢_ sub-contracting, wholesale dis- Strengthened. |workers. These brief experiences, Se cece noch cae eh one Raa ev elODs | eaek is, as corkmion practice in the in- | charge of workers, graft and ite. Thus we see conditions where the | more than any amount of propaganda, Nq4 men shows thai ey recognize Kae jtion have once more come to life, s have been 0; a = ve le TRS a nined | R i ati the best means of | 2ustry- |threatening the very existence of the unions nario eer eerened (ene) dis. [bay iwiade Bie ne ceterainen vel ] { 1, . Rares A ay #5 4 workers during the | Corruption and Demoralization. Furriers’ Union. Within a short period s 2 : : i mined, the jobbing-contracting sys- | against the combined forces | The needle trade industry is contin-| Not a trace is left of the dignity, of a few months the devastating hand | pun eChHtiemennnn swikeancest otha igh Tae the tate “ou athete| ee uously growing in importance in spite|and self respect achieved by the|of the Wolls and the McGradys has open shop becoming ever more | The Theatre Guild Presents | REPUBLIC west | Evenings of the occasional seasonal slumps.| workers thru the organization of | nullified the gains of the 1926 strike m ng, the problem of the out-of- Forge Weapons in Straggle | 4 Se ee ware aa, The employers recognize that by|their union. The cloak and dress-|and broken the backbone of the Fur- town shop more pressing, the sweat The workers in the needle trades | PO R G ‘The Mulberry Bush solidifying their forces, by establish-} maker today is an abject slave of his | riers’ Union. shop and speed-up system once more |are living thru a period of great | Th, W. 5 : Colbert ing a centralized machinery on alemployer and is subjected to the | The Amalgamated. coming into ex us and the ranks stress and agony, but in the course of | Guild his thurs - scientific basis, their position in re-| speed-up system and to humiliating} Equally disastrous is the situation of the these struggles they are forging the nn + — lation to other factors in the industry | conditions. in the Amalgamated. Even tho no hi : ,and enthusi ons ‘ational 41 St. W. of B’way will be strengthened to the great ad- 7 f that will enable them to re- \HAMPDEM The Cloak & Dressmakers’ Union, | open war, such as Ai in the Fur-' strife. ~ ‘Thi construc r unions on a sound] Extra Met. (Ble Non Day} oaena in Ibsen's comedy vantage of their business growth. which was the proud achievement of | riers and in the We Us tion we i in the haedl trade | basis where craft unionism, autocracy | ¢ | “AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE” The association thus far is limited} thousands of men and women, is | practiced by the eee of the hunions at a time when the employers’! and a policy of class collaboration The Trial of Mary Dugan” | iH d ‘Thea., B’way at 624 St to women’s apparel industries, but the | shattered into fragments, its prestige | Amalgamated, it has, nevertheless, associations are strengthening their) will be substituted by amalgamation, | By Bayard Veiller, with ome en’s Evenings at 8:30, coat enomnection and similarity of fundermined, its morale broken. The |thru cunning and treachery expelled ranks and sclidifging chele freon oeracy and a militant struggle| ANN HARDING—REX CHERRYmaN | Matinces Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 problems between the women’s and]|best union workers, employed by|many of the most militant workers Right Wing Bankruptcy Proved. st employers. Only in unity of | = rata ~~~ | Chanin’s W. 45 St Royale. Mts. Wed,,Sat, the men’s clothing industries will un-| their respective firms for many years,/from the Union and from the shops,| In the course of the past few y action against the united front of the All Performances Except Monday doubtedly lead to the extension of this| are dis charged by order of the high-|and has i tuted an iron dictator-!the bureaue | The Desert Song Winthrop Ames edi 5 i of the needle trades | bosses lies the salvation of the needle Guingre & Sullivan “Mikado” association to include the employers of the International. |ship maintained with the aid of (has. demonstra ated its bankruptcy. It|trade workers. The struggle ‘must | With Rowt. Halliday & Pddie Bessel | Opera % of the men’s garment industry. — are sent to scab against strong-arm men — a _ dictatorship ;has demonstrated its inability to lead |go on and will go on until this is ac- | v Eat 45 St.W.of Biway | eal "aves, Only—IOLANTH” The employers of the various each other and are given police pro-) which is brutally rushing every at- fava Bane tie’ workena iaitiiot: strug- complished, | IMPERIAL Evenings 8:80 300TH 45 St, W. of Bway ves. 8:40 ee Lee wate ge ie Sihacni De Wheres Mats. Wed. and Sat, 2:3 Greetings to the Workers and Peasants of the Union of Socialist Soviet | eS Republics on the Occasion of the 10th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution _ i Matinees Wed. & Sat. at 2:40 | Winthrop Ames ESC N PE Presents with Leslie Howard 2 RE, West of B'way. MATING ES WED. & SAT. 2:30 | As pte, prepnenko, § Brown J Berman Fellings, A. Johanson, Simon Libros, E. Niemela, Mrs, Th e i: A D D E R | he Fanatics Abelson Boyko, M Roffner Bassin, Fannie Feldman, Herbert Jylha, Mr. & Mrs, Lemie, L. Oilani LYRIC THEA eo Bryzuki, M. Bogat - Bogarol, P. Frohman, Wleanor Johnson, A. Lutzky, H. Okman, 0. of B’way. Fort tie sent ica ses ; Back, "i eae Martin vere ag ; Gavura, Stephen Jounsen, C. Labow, Aaron Odell, Ida H. | i DAVENPORT ‘THEATRE Antonowitz, | Sec Bolzork, Frank evozak,—A. Giereke, Hinnach Jacobson, J. Lenerkus Olkin, L. 1 aThea., 65 W. 35th. Ey. 8:39 /133 E. 27th St. near Lexington Ave. eye, 2 Balle, Frank Boile, M Gimesky, Martin Jochseld, Marie Lipsky Owzatzky, R. | GARRICK “Nats” thurs, & Sat 2:80 Rau ty Ee ae Oe gepet Pare: a otal ewe) Beltra, Emilio , Jennie Gaulach, O. Johnson, Laura Lehman, J. Ozolin, A. 1 ye ke AREY LEIS “ ‘ Z . men Sv seenetetny is BaseelophorePeter Golosman, Chaim Johnson, Minnie Latin, J. Oldeich, A. | Maee sea oye priekeren IO teu edera | H AMLE | 7 Besiich, A ales Berossi, Pietro Cegal Girshengorn, Isaac Kremerg, I. Lutzky, I. Okicich, Mary TAMING LS the SHREW | Penowite, A Baldasar, Mike Colodny, H. Girshencom, Rachie Kostaff, Gregory Lewis, Anna Okieich, P. as | with BUTLER DAVENPORT Ripert ieee Belich M. Barola, Mike ea Steve Gillmer, Samuel Kopersky, L. Laine, Mr. & Mrs. Opris, L. | poe As ee eee z Bs Be Re Beieradovter, Wank Carlson, S. Gralton, James Kasmyer, Henry Linden, Mr. & Mrs. Popoff, M jaan gna ay en, O. | ; ; . . , opoff, M. | - eplanald i Rose Vinko Bechiekoff, K. Carlson, A. Gasman, Murray Klostrich, Theo, Lehto, Wm. Porteney, J. | AERIS Pyeseaeereenae Piievist, 4 Bens John Bicwminy Geo. Cajanus, Chris Gendelman, M Kaloff, Geo. Laitola, A. Partanen, J. \“M EVA LE GALLIENNE Anderson, Hari 3ehrin, John 3aloff, T. Seles Ue: Soeec Klein, H. Lehto, Saimi Pasckow, Joe |?" vontgnt—"PHE GOOD HOPE” Anderson, Gust Babad Beraff, B. Clonis, Geerge Goshfield Katzman, Abrahom Lindstrom, 2. Peerson, Harry “Wed |S ae es 5 De eksaar Mis. M Biaig: B. Beraff, Harry Castante, C. Goldman, G: Kurland, Rose Larson, Andrew Pavich, M. MUSIC AND CONCERTS Abelson, Sarah erg, Isidor Buneta, Joe Chicko, John Guenblatt, Nathan Keetzman, Jennie Lundin, Erid Alperovitz, Sol Allen, G. W. Py: Wm. Bayer, Bagaed, Brodowsky, Isidore Bespalow, Jack aa A Wrecking the Labor Banks By WM. Z. FOSTER The Collapse of the Labor Banks Investment Companies of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and j Here is a record of trade union treachery a, Without equal in American Labor history. t> | It is a story of crooked leadership; disas- | trous policies; looting of the tz -asury; rifling the union insurance funds and _ pension money. A most astounding account of events that nearly wrecked one of the great American trade unions and resulted in the loss of over twenty million dollars from the funds’ of the railroad workers. The story is written from authentic documents and official records of the Engineers’ convention which lasted for seven weeks. “Wrecking the Labor Banks” stands out as one of the most dramatie exposures of the dangers of class collaboration ever written. 25 CENTS Send one dollar for five copies RAILROADERS' st By Wm. % NEXT Foster .., THE WATSON-PARKER LAW By Wn. ‘2%. Foster..,,,... 15 THE WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 89 East 125th Street New York, N.-Y. Chuich, Nick Chackman, I. @ Cuckren, Max Chris, N Candra, M | Cruchorsky, V Dudine, F. Drotvill, Alex Dailes, ‘Ida Donety, 8. | Diedo, P. Dudar, Paul Duritz Davis, Sam Duimorich, John Dolwitz Daniloff, D, Danilof?, A. “Evanoff, Steve Este, E. D. | Epstein Elkin, B. | Eckowitz, | Erlach, L, Epstein, Ida Eckstein, Max Elriew, V. | Echo, J. Erickman, H. Epstein, Isadore | Freeman | | Favabini, 8, | Fish, David A, Fichlander, D. Fruman, D, Farber, B, Frankel, M, Fagen, Gussie Feinstein, 8, Feinberg, H. Ww. > Pioiftox, Goldin, M. Grabowski, FE, Gregorson, J. Gerber Grego Greenb! Gerlach, Gernane Gestein, Grondahl, A, Galitziale Galoe, Y Gontmaher, Goldman, M. Green, Irving Gunther, G. G, Gerth, Hereun, Hietala, Hudecek, Hudece’ Hel) Herz lerzog, Hodak, J. ° Horvitz, Fran} Hribkoff, A, He nor, M, Helizig, Pau! Herman Horn, David Holaft, Alek Hadoltt, Harry Halbkoft, H, Hamoisioln, inving He , Hyman tLouhatyt, 1 lorwits, M, Hoggort, A. Uenberg, | i twa, Taw’ P Katzman, Isidore Kaufman, Krall, D. Kazahn, S. Kustin, W. Keldes, F. K oszhousky, Peter Kathinsity jan, Simon jan, Ar Kralnia, J. iKXonarza, Vladimir Kodra, Soseph Kratman, David Kogerman, Wm, Kreitzer, Anna s, Anna ynaki, N, M, Lituehy, Bertha Luigi, Vv isintin Lokoeff, Alex Loknef!, Jack Lavy. Heowaais Brant Leitner, Aurel Levin, Yetta Levine, J. Lazaroff, M. Markver, S. Malk, M. A Meei, George Minkoff, Israel Malakoff, S. Minkin, J. Malstrom, Carl J, Mraskok, Edward Merriman, Mary Merriman, Sarah Meredow, I. Masoroch, §. Miller, M. Mioc, M. M, Makierman, Miner, John Midiaevi Menis, Maloff, B. Mance, Lawrence Miller, C, MeGarlin, Peter J, Meitser, Sam Meltzer, Yetta Meyer, M, Musikar, L. Malikoff, Ray Morenjof, 'T. Moedvitsky, Anton Macavel, I, Martini, Bemo Marfiany, J. Nikelai, David Negri, C, Norikoff, Peter Nieander, T, Nennzh. J. Peterson, J. Peterson, C. Paltz, S. S. Plotnik, B. Pearlman, R. 8. Person, P. F, Person, Harry Palatine, G. Petroff, John Paratore, Bert Petuch, M. Petriwsky, Peter Pilnick, Frank Rumack, R. Robinsky, M. Robin, B. Robboy, J. Robin, 8. Robin, F. Rudick, W. Raskin, 8, Radman, John Remmel, 0, Rosenzweig, O. H. Rosenzweig, R. L. Rosenzweig, FE. Richmond, David Rinis, I. A. Rich, J, Resnick, J, Ricklin Remais, Joseph Rodriguez, P, Roupy, B, Richman, Alex Rappoport, H. 0. Righthand Rabinowitz, 'T. Rubor, M. Reichstein, S. Rossman | { | | | | | jwm. Fox ppdeante) the Motion Picture | EL Mee TS Bo Beare oe ae, GRAND OPERA = does 4 St.,W.ofB'y.E 8.16 By HERMANN SUDERMANN | GALLO 7%. Sibganenionteoui ‘ |Symphonic Movietone Accompaniment | ponigh TOSCA, Tues, LA FORZ: . Thea., 424 St., W. of Bway | DEL D TINO, Evgs. $1 to $3. Mats. $ Times Sq. pwrin DaiLy, 230-810 | to $2.50 (Plus Tax). | The NewPlaywrights Theatre . 40 Commerce Street, near Sheridan Square Greenwich Village : TELEPHONE WAL 5786. ‘ THE ONLY HOME FOR LABOR PLAYS IN AMERICA Presents Paul The. BRU? The first modern labor play to debunk company unionism and the Sifton’s play so-called prosperity in the Ford factories, This is the last week. I have ever seen In my lilo, hav ) again. Get your tickets now. | UPTON SINCLAIR SAYS OF “THE BELT”: "You have produced one ef the most If the worker | HELP SUPPORT this theatre and The DAILY WORKER by buying tickets at The DAILY WORKER office, 108 East 14th Street, vid and exciting labor plays ‘ knew how much fun you to offer, your little theatre couldn't hold the crowds, wore twenty years younger, to start writing for your theatre all over I wish I lace sas